Jane Fonda lobbies for harassment protections for domestic workers

By

Basma Amer, Medill News Service

Jane Fonda, actress and activist, speaks at a news conference on women's rights at work and helping to protect domestic and farmworkers against sexual harassment and discrimination, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI | License Photo

Jane Fonda (L), actress and activist, puts her arm around Myrla Baldonado, a domestic worker and victim of sexual assault and harassment, during a press conference on women's rights at work and ending harassment, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI | License Photo

"This is not a new thing for me to want to stand with women workers. When the MeToo and Time's Up movement burst forth almost a year ago in Hollywood, I never thought I would live to see a day when women were actually heard," Fonda, an Academy Award winner and activist, said at a Capitol Hill news conference.

About 90 percent of in-home workers are women, working as maids, house cleaners and care providers, according to a study released by the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute in 2013. About 20 percent are non-naturalized immigrants.

"On the job, I was discriminated against and sexually harassed, from being groped in the dark to being told obscene stories in the dead of the night, and being asked to perform sexual favors," said Myrla Baldonado, member organizer at the Pilipino Workers Center.

Baldonado fled poverty in the Philippines 12 years ago to work as a live-in caregiver, working 80 hours a week at $4 an hour plus room and board, she said. Job security, overtime and health benefits weren't included.

"The conditions that domestic workers and farmworkers face have been early signals of some of the conditions facing all workers," said Ai-jen Poo, director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance and co-director of Caring Across Organizations.

The speakers urged expanding Title VII of the Civil Rights Act to include independent contractors and businesses with fewer than 15 employees; currently its prohibitions on discrimination only apply to larger companies and state and federal governments.

Speakers emphasized the seriousness of the matter given the president's nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, which could tilt the high court to the right.

"This conversation is happening at a really critical moment where the future of workers and women's rights is really at stake with the nomination of Judge Kavanaugh," said Fatima Goss Graves, president of National Women's Law Center.

Last year, the National Farmworkers Women's Alliance, representing about 700,000 female farmworkers, wrote an open letter to stand in solidarity with a number of prominent Hollywood actresses in their protests against sexual assault.

"The fact that workers from the fields were reaching out to us celebrities in Hollywood saying, 'We stand with you' made us all realize that this notion that has become so important -- of intersectionality -- was now being fleshed out," Fonda said.